Non-Invasive Monitoring of Oxygen Tension and Oxygen Transport Inside Subcutaneous Devices After H2S Treatment

Avid Najdahmadi, Alexandra M Smink, Paul de Vos, Jonathan R T Lakey, Elliot Botvinick*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

2 Citations (Scopus)
63 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Medical devices for cell therapy can be improved through prevascularization. In this work we study the vascularization of a porous polymer device, previously used by our group for pancreatic islet transplantation with results indicating improved glycemic control. Oxygen partial pressure within such devices was monitored non-invasively using an optical technique. Oxygen-sensitive tubes were fabricated and placed inside devices prior to subcutaneous implantation in nude mice. We tested the hypothesis that vascularization will be enhanced by administration of the pro-angiogenic factor hydrogen sulfide (H2S). We found that oxygen dynamics were unique to each implant and that the administration of H2S does not result in significant changes in perfusion of the devices as compared with control. These observations suggest that vascular perfusion and density are not necessarily correlated, and that the rate of vascularization was not enhanced by the pro-angiogenic agent.

Original languageEnglish
Article number0963689719893936
Number of pages9
JournalCell Transplantation
Volume29
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 5-Feb-2020

Keywords

  • oxygen monitoring
  • tissue engineering
  • islet transplantation
  • diabetes
  • medical devices
  • biophotonics
  • ISLET TRANSPLANTATION
  • HYDROGEN-SULFIDE
  • APOPTOSIS
  • MODEL
  • SITE

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